Toronto Star

Youth advocacy experts question roundtable

PC government aims to improve child protection, custody and services for Indigenous youth

- LAURIE MONSEBRAAT­EN SOCIAL JUSTICE REPORTER With files from Kristin Rushowy

Less than two weeks after axing Ontario’s independen­t child advocate, the Ford government has announced plans to set up “advocacy tables” in the children’s ministry to improve child protection, youth custody and services for Indigenous youth.

The roundtable­s will include former youth with experience in foster care and group homes, Indigenous child welfare and the youth criminal justice system, said Lisa MacLeod, minister of children, community and social services. They will report directly to her, she said.

“Ontario’s most vulnerable children and youth deserve better outcomes,” MacLeod said in the legislatur­e. “Our first step to making necessary improvemen­ts will be the establishm­ent of advocacy tables, which will have direct access to decision makers.”

Champions of children’s rights welcomed the new youth roundtable­s, but said they are no substitute for an independen­t advocate’s office.

“It’s pretty wonderful to hear they’re creating these roundtable­s,” said Cheyanne Ratnam, 30, who spent her teen years in a group home and is a member of the Ontario Children’s Advocacy Associatio­n, a group of young adults who have lived experience in the areas overseen by the advocate.

“But setting up roundtable­s does not replace the interventi­on and prevention initiative­s and the type of one-to-one engagement young people and their allies experience­d with the advocate’s office,” she said.

“Ministries and government­s are focused on policy,” she added. “They are not really known for doing meaningful work with young people.”

NDP children’s critic Monique Taylor said roundtable­s “cannot have the same impact” as the children’s advocate.

Without a separate office, “there is going to be no true advocacy that will happen going forward,” Taylor added. “That was one of the main foundation­s of that office, bringing those youth together … to be able to speak their voice … That is now gone.”

Finance Minister Vic Fedeli announced the office’s demise on Nov.15 as part of his fall economic update.

The advocate’s office employs 80 fulland part-time staff in offices in Thunder Bay and Toronto, including 28 full-time staff dedicated to advocacy. Its annual budget was almost $13 million last year. The office is expected to wind down in the spring.

Under the change, the advocate’s investigat­ive staff will be transferre­d to the provincial Ombudsman’s office and become part of a new children’s unit.

Under the 2007 law, the advocate’s office is mandated to advocate and investigat­e on behalf of children and youth involved with children’s aid, the mental health system, youth justice, disability services and provincial schools for people who are deaf, blind or live with severe disabiliti­es. The office is also responsibl­e for Indigenous and Métis kids.

In addition to lacking independen­ce, the roundtable­s also neglect half of the advocate’s mandate — children and youth involved with the mental health system, disability services and in provincial demonstrat­ion schools, said Judy Finlay, an associate professor of child and youth care at Ryerson University.

“This speaks clearly to the government’s lack of knowledge about the vulnerable kids in this province,” said Finlay, the last child advocate who reported directly to the minister.

She said there are about 25,000 kids “who don’t live at home, who don’t have advocates in their corner and are in the care of the state.” On Thursday, Ratnam’s advocacy group and Ryerson University’s school of child and youth care are staging a rally and a news conference in support of the advocate’s office.

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